Lecture 5 - Time Value of Money
Lecture 5 - Time Value of Money
• Simple Interest
Interest paid (earned) on only the original
amount, or principal, borrowed (lent).
• Compound Interest
Interest paid (earned) on any previous
interest earned, as well as on the principal
borrowed (lent).
Simple Interest Formula
Formula SI = P0(i)(n)
SI: Simple Interest
P0: Deposit today (t=0)
i: Interest Rate per Period
n: Number of Time Periods
Simple Interest Example
• SI = P0(i)(n)
= $1,000(0.07)(2)
= $140
Simple Interest (FV)
20000
10% Simple
15000 Interest
7% Compound
10000
Interest
5000 10% Compound
Interest
0
1st Year 10th 20th 30th
Year Year Year
Future Value
Single Deposit (Graphic)
0 1 2
7%
$1,000
FV2
Future Value
Single Deposit (Formula)
Period 6% 7% 8%
1 1.060 1.070 1.080
2 1.124 1.145 1.166
3 1.191 1.225 1.260
4 1.262 1.311 1.360
5 1.338 1.403 1.469
Using Future Value Tables
FV2 = $1,000 (FVIF7%,2)
= $1,000 (1.145)
= $1,145 [Due to Rounding]
Period 6% 7% 8%
1 1.060 1.070 1.080
2 1.124 1.145 1.166
3 1.191 1.225 1.260
4 1.262 1.311 1.360
5 1.338 1.403 1.469
TVM on the Calculator
Press:
2nd CLR TVM
2 N
7 I/Y
–1000 PV
0 PMT
CPT FV
Inputs 2 7 –1,000 0
N I/Y PV PMT FV
Compute 1,144.90
N: 2 Periods (enter as 2)
I/Y: 7% interest rate per period (enter as 7 NOT 0.07)
PV: $1,000 (enter as negative as you have “less”)
PMT: Not relevant in this situation (enter as 0)
FV: Compute (Resulting answer is positive)
Story Problem Example
0 1 2 3 4 5
10%
$10,000
FV5
Story Problem Solution
Press:
2nd CLR TVM
5 N
10 I/Y
–10000 PV
0 PMT
CPT FV
Inputs 5 10 –10,000 0
N I/Y PV PMT FV
Compute 16,105.10
72 / 12% = 6 Years
[Actual Time is 6.12 Years]
Solving the Period Problem
Inputs 12 –1,000 0 +2,000
N I/Y PV PMT FV
Compute 6.12 years
0 1 2
7%
$1,000
PV0
General Present Value
Formula
PV0 = FV1 / (1 + i)1
PV0 = FV2 / (1 + i)2
etc.
General Present Value Formula:
PV0 = FVn / (1 + i)n
or PV0 = FVn (PVIFi,n) – See Table II
Valuation Using Table II
PVIFi,n is found on Table II
at the end of the book.
Period 6% 7% 8%
1 0.943 0.935 0.926
2 0.890 0.873 0.857
3 0.840 0.816 0.794
4 0.792 0.763 0.735
5 0.747 0.713 0.681
Using Present Value Tables
PV2 = $1,000 (PVIF7%,2)
= $1,000 (.873)
= $873 [Due to Rounding]
Period 6% 7% 8%
1 0.943 0.935 0.926
2 0.890 0.873 0.857
3 0.840 0.816 0.794
4 0.792 0.763 0.735
5 0.747 0.713 0.681
Solving the PV Problem
Inputs 2 7 0 +1,000
N I/Y PV PMT FV
Compute –873.44
N: 2 Periods (enter as 2)
I/Y: 7% interest rate per period (enter as 7 NOT 0.07)
PV: Compute (Resulting answer is negative “deposit”)
PMT: Not relevant in this situation (enter as 0)
FV: $1,000 (enter as positive as you “receive $”)
Story Problem Example
Julie Miller wants to know how large of a
deposit to make so that the money will grow
to $10,000 in 5 years at a discount rate of
10%.
0 1 2 3 4 5
10%
$10,000
PV0
Story Problem Solution
• Calculation based on general formula:
PV0 = FVn / (1 + i)n
PV0 = $10,000 / (1 + 0.10)5
= $6,209.21
• Calculation based on Table I:
PV0 = $10,000 (PVIF10%, 5)
= $10,000 (0.621)
= $6,210.00 [Due to Rounding]
Solving the PV Problem
Inputs 5 10 0 +10,000
N I/Y PV PMT FV
Compute –6,209.21
(Ordinary Annuity)
End of End of End of
Period 1 Period 2 Period 3
0 1 2 3
(Annuity Due)
Beginning of Beginning of Beginning of
Period 1 Period 2 Period 3
0 1 2 3
$1,145
$1,225
R = Periodic
Cash Flow
PVAn
PVAn = R/(1 + i)1 + R/(1 + i)2
+ ... + R/(1 + i)n
Example of an
Ordinary Annuity – PVA
Cash flows occur at the end of the period
0 1 2 3 4
7%
R: Periodic
PVADn Cash Flow
$2,808.02 = PVADn
0 1 2 3 4 5
10%
$600 $600 $400 $400 $100
PV0
How to Solve?
1. Solve a “piece-at-a-time” by
discounting each piece back to t=0.
2. Solve a “group-at-a-time” by first
breaking problem into groups of
annuity streams and any single
cash flow groups. Then discount
each group back to t=0.
“Piece-At-A-Time”
0 1 2 3 4 5
10%
$600 $600 $400 $400 $100
$545.45
$495.87
$300.53
$273.21
$ 62.09
$1677.15 = PV0 of the Mixed Flow
“Group-At-A-Time” (#1)
0 1 2 3 4 5
10%
$600 $600 $400 $400 $100
$1,041.60
$ 573.57
$ 62.10
$1,677.27 = PV0 of Mixed Flow [Using Tables]
(1 + [ i / m ] )m – 1
BWs Effective
Annual Interest Rate
Basket Wonders (BW) has a $1,000 CD at
the bank. The interest rate is 6%
compounded quarterly for 1 year. What
is the Effective Annual Interest Rate
(EAR)?
EAR = ( 1 + 0.06 / 4 )4 – 1
= 1.0614 - 1 = 0.0614 or 6.14%!
Converting to an EAR
Press:
2nd I Conv
6 ENTER
↓ ↓
4 ENTER
↑ CPT
2nd QUIT
Results:
BAL = 8,425.90* ↓
PRN = –1,574.10* ↓
INT = –1,200.00* ↓
Year 1 information only
Source: Courtesy of Texas Instruments *Note: Compare to 3-82
Using the Amortization
Functions of the Calculator
Press:
2nd Amort
2 ENTER
2 ENTER
Results:
BAL = 6,662.91* ↓
PRN = –1,763.99* ↓
INT = –1,011.11* ↓
Year 2 information only
*Note: Compare to 3-82
Source: Courtesy of Texas Instruments
Using the Amortization
Functions of the Calculator
Press:
2nd Amort
1 ENTER
5 ENTER
Results:
BAL = 0.00 ↓
PRN = – 10,000.00 ↓
INT = –3,870.49 ↓
Entire 5 Years of loan information
(see the total line of 3-82)
Source: Courtesy of Texas Instruments
Usefulness of Amortization